AI Article Synopsis

  • Host immunity to SARS-CoV-2 varies widely, leading to outcomes from asymptomatic infection to severe illness, with some patients showing reduced type I interferon levels before clinical deterioration.
  • Genetic mutations and neutralizing autoantibodies impacting the interferon-I pathway have been identified as risk factors for developing severe COVID-19 pneumonia.
  • In hospitalized patients, there is consistently lower responsiveness of interferon-I proteins upon immune stimulation, suggesting a potential reason for the poor effectiveness of interferon-I treatments in advanced COVID-19 cases, highlighting the need for new therapeutic approaches.

Article Abstract

Host immunity to infection with SARS-CoV-2 is highly variable, dictating diverse clinical outcomes ranging from asymptomatic to severe disease and death. We previously reported reduced type I interferon in severe COVID-19 patients preceded clinical worsening. Further studies identified genetic mutations in loci of the TLR3- or TLR7-dependent interferon-I pathways, or neutralizing interferon-I autoantibodies as risk factors for development of COVID-19 pneumonia. Here we show in patient cohorts with different severities of COVID-19, that baseline plasma interferon α measures differ according to the immunoassay used, timing of sampling, the interferon α subtype measured, and the presence of autoantibodies. We also show a consistently reduced induction of interferon-I proteins in hospitalized COVID-19 patients upon immune stimulation, that is not associated with detectable neutralizing autoantibodies against interferon α or interferon ω. Intracellular proteomic analysis shows increased monocyte numbers in hospitalized COVID-19 patients but impaired interferon-I response after stimulation. We confirm this by ex vivo whole blood stimulation with interferon-I which induces transcriptomic responses associated with inflammation in hospitalized COVID-19 patients, that is not seen in controls or non-hospitalized moderate cases. These results may explain the dichotomy of the poor clinical response to interferon-I based treatments in late stage COVID-19, despite the importance of interferon-I in early acute infection and may guide alternative therapeutic strategies.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9700809PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1038/s41467-022-34895-1DOI Listing

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